The provided sources argue that biological life is fundamentally a cybernetic and semiotic system that cannot be reduced to the laws of physics and chemistry alone. Author David L. Abel distinguishes between self-ordering phenomena, which arise from natural constraints, and formal organization, which requires purposeful choices at specific decision nodes. He asserts that genetic information functions as a linear digital symbol system, utilizing arbitrary codes and programmed instructions to orchestrate complex metabolism. This “Cybernetic Cut” represents a boundary where prescriptive information and functional control emerge, transitions that Abel contends are statistically impossible through mere chance or necessity. Consequently, the texts critique modern origin-of-life models like Assembly Theory, suggesting they fail to account for the engineering-grade steering required to initiate life. Overall, the collection emphasizes that life is an instantiated formalism governed by rules and logic rather than just inanimate physicodynamics.